Here are a couple of 'before' pics of the home:
{My clients' dining room: They already had a GORGEOUS chandelier by Oly and really beautifully done window treatments. The dining room functions as both a dining room and a sitting room and the dropleaf dining table itself moves under the window and becomes a console when the room transitions into a sitting room. My clients purchased the settee so it could function for both spaces.}
Here's what their living room looked like before:
{As you can see, they already had some amazing pieces to work with & I love their style. My goal was to warm up the space & to get it just right for them.}
One of the first things we did was repaint the main areas of the home in ivory & to repaint the doors black for some contrast & interest & to bounce the black accents throughout the room:
We used many of their own pieces & added new pieces to create a sort of modern mix of old & new. To see all of my plans for the spaces, click here.
Here's the before:
And here's the 'after':
We rearranged the furniture & floated the daybed so that it coule be accessed from both sides. We added a pair of clean-lined linen wing chairs for a cozy spot to hang.
We added a mix of textured, patterned and hand block-printed fabrics for some energy & interest:
{Dark brown & white pillow fabric & ottoman fabric by Raoul Textiles, and center paisley pillow is one of mine, "live paisley."}
We flanked the existing sofa with two large iron & cement tables to hold loads of books & magazines.
Below, the lamp is a custom creation by my friend, lighting designer, Rick Singleton. The photographs are taken from the oversized German Magazine, The Manipulator, and I found them at Avery Studios. The frames were beautifully hand painted by another friend, artist, John Matthew Moore. I wanted them hung so that they intersected slightly with the wing chairs for a more layered, relaxed look. I love how the little kitty is peeking out from between the two chairs. We went with a clear glass cocktail table because even though the room looks open & expansive, it's really fairly small & we wanted to keep it feeling open & airy.
A little workspace is carved out of the living room:
Here's the view from their loft bedroom above, which I really love. The wood floors transition to the deck floors just outside:
Here's the dining room below:
Here's the dining room "after"--
The vintage BRNO chairs we found were covered in hairy cream cowhide. The painting is from one of my favorite Natural Curiosities collections by Paule Marrot, the French painter, engraver & textile designer who did most of her work between the 1920s and 1950s. As a decorator, there's nothing more exciting than when you find clients who are willing to go outside the box and who are open to atypical things.
Here's another view of the dining room:
The leaves on the table were honeysuckle branches from my yard and I really love how they looked & smelled. I don't have any at our new house & think I need to get some.
To see the rest of the photos of other areas of the home (including a little sprucing up we did in the master bedroom) and the dining room set up as both a sitting room and a dining room, check out the current issue of Small Room Decorating Magazine. The article was produced by Charlotte Safavi & shot by Helen Norman. I haven't been able to pick up my copy yet & it doesn't seem like the magazine is sold everywhere but I have seen it at my grocery store & in bookstores. Thanks so much to everyone who put the article together & especially to my clients for being so open to the design process & for letting it all happen!!
Hope you enjoyed!!
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